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trow
[ troh ]
verb (used with or without object)
- to believe, think, or suppose.
trow
/ trəʊ /
verb
- archaic.to think, believe, or trust
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of trow1
Example Sentences
Paris Trow, manager of Maesgwyn Hall in Wrexham, said the city had changed substantially over the last few years since the takeover.
Abortion was so popular, in fact, that it became the source of wealth for one of the richest women in the country at the time, Ann Trow Lohman, who was better-known by her advertising moniker, Madame Restell.
"In 1977, George Trow was working on an endless profile of Atlantic Record founder Ahmet Ertegun when he met Stan," remembered the acclaimed author Jamaica Kincaid.
“There is no doubt that his understanding of the precise nature of the crisis saved the global financial system in 2008,” wrote Stuart Trow of Bloomberg Opinion.
In the late 1800s, the New York Times ran stories about abortions performed by Ann Trow Lohman, also known as Madame Restell, who served New York's elite and ran a lucrative mail-order abortifacient business.
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